Archive for the ‘Vintage’ Category

House of Lavande: Happy 100th Birthday, Palm Beach!

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

Tracy Smith, founder of House of Lavande. Photo Billy Farrell Agency.

In January we flew south to see some sun (after months of snow, snow, snow) and to celebrate the town of Palm Beach’s Centennial with vintage couture jewelry brand House of Lavande. Since it also fell on HOL founder Tracy Smith‘s birthday, and because you can’t give a cake and candles to a beach, we toasted with lavender colored vodka shots, cabana stripes and surf boards.

All our favorite friends from NYC attended and all our favorite editors were there to record the dancing, diamante, and debauchery from Vogue, Elle, Purple Magazine, W, Paper, Teen Vogue, Tales of Endearment, and Fashionista. Even Page Six had a spy lurking in the sand by the dance floor as guests kicked off their heels and the chandeliers swung from side to side in the oceanside winds!

Garance, Garance!

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

I have been a fan of her blog ever since I first laid eyes on it,  two years ago. I love her work and often felt we shared an aesthetic. So, when she emailed me out of the blue this cold January to ask to get together and, oh, yeah, take your picture, I had to keep from jumping out of my skin with excitement. She is one of my favorite photographers and you know what it’s like to meet your idols in life!! I had to act cool. Instead, we immediately started exchanging stories and jokes, and hours and hours flew by. Just like that.

© Photo Garance Doré www.garancedore.fr/en/

And then she asked me another favor: would I write a NYC guide? (I am a Gemini, and anyone who follows astrology knows that we are walking databases!) So I had two heart attacks, one after the other!! Just like a teenage girl.

© Photo Garance Doré www.garancedore.fr/en/

Thank you, Garance!!

The Best Vintage in NYC, Plus Vintage Shopping Tips

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Originally published on The Huffington Post on June 7, 2010.

Watch me tour the city’s premier vintage archives: the hush-hush resources for celebrity stylists, fashion insiders and top designers, and the most eccentric, amusing dress-up chests imaginable. I also share some vintage shopping tips.

Design with Nina Freudenberger

Friday, October 2nd, 2009
Nina

Décor It Girl and Haus Interior owner Nina Freudenberger offers some great tips.

Best way to figure out a color scheme for a space?

Start with the walls. The easiest way to chose a paint color is to find the one object in the room you obsess over. Within that piece, choose the color which draws your eye. Take the actual object to any paint store and have it color matched (most paint stores will mix the exact color if you bring in an item, fabric, etc.) If you are worried its too dark, have them add white to lighten it up, or go as far as to have just a hint/glow of that color in the majority of white.

What are the best items you find for the cheapest when decorating?
Amazing finds at flea markets such as Brimfield, Mass; Twice a week, the Bekman Gallery debuts a limited edition of an artists work, starting at $20. The artist list is incredible.

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Where do you go for inspiration when you’re all “New Yorked City-ed out”?

I go upstate to the Hudson Valley. Not only is it an amazing place to visit but it’s also home to some of my favorite antique stores. Make sure to stroll down Warren Street in Hudson, and to drive all the way north on Route 9, through Springfield and Rhinebeck for great vintage furniture shopping along the way.

What is your favorite New York building/architecture?

The Four Seasons Restaurant by Philip Johnson. Being enveloped inside the genius of Mies van der Rohe’s Seagram building and the moving wire mesh curtains (due to the air-conditioning, which reportedly was a “happy mistake” found out only after the installation) is enough for me to be sure that this is an absolute masterpiece of architecture and interior design.
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If you were a restaurant which one would you be?

A cross between Marlow & Sons, and Charles.

If you were a book which one would you be?

I would hope to be A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers… at least, one day, hopefully….

Can you share some “Haus” tips with us?

Trophies – whether using just one or a few, these look great on a bookshelf or end table in your library. Think about having them engraved with your favorite funny quotes.
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Rope Knot – perfect as a door stop or place on the lower shelf of an entry console for a nautical accent.
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Fouta Towels – these are 100% organic cotton and a great alternative to standard terry cloth. Wash them twice, they become extremely absorbent and are less abrasive on the skin than a typical bath towel.
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Haus Interior, 250 Elizabeth Street, NYC, Tel 212 741 0455

New Orleans: A Colorful Revival of Crumbling Grandeur

Monday, December 8th, 2008

This was first published on The Huffington Post 1 December 2008.

Upon booking my first trip to New Orleans, Vogue promptly landed on my doorstep. There, before my very eyes, was a whole page dedicated to the style of New Orleans, or in my case: What To Pack. (Cue angels singing from above.) Vogue inspired colorful dress and vibrant prints suitable for the warm weather and bright street culture.

Packing list:
Vintage Albert Nippon floral sundress, for day strolling
Sunglasses
Neutrogena Dry Touch SPF 80
Marni sun hat
H+M (Balenciaga knock-off) chintzy mini dress
Alexander Wang cropped leather jacket
House of Lavande diamante cuffs (take that, mardis gras beads!)
Shanghai Tang multi-colored sequin cocktail dress
Martine Sitbon turquoise mesh stiletto sandals
Neon beaded Lulu Frost necklace
Cecelia stingray clutch
Camera (Leica point + shoot)
Black Louboutin ballets
Sergio Rossi strappy flat sandals
A Man in Full by Tom Wolfe to read on the plane (takes place in the South)

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Upon landing, my driver fetched me with his soft Southern drawl and chivalrous grace (gladly). What I found was a lovely finally! feeling for wearing color and a bit of shimmer in The Big Easy. I love to wear brights (and even unexpected neons) but even I can get discouraged sometimes in the cool blue of winter. It fits right in with the bright yellows, red and blues of the fabulous architecture, intricate balcony ironwork (and the ferns and flora over which they drape) and easygoing yet spirited lifestyle. I worried less of being overdressed or wearing too much color, than I do the grey cement gardens of NYC. A relevant fashion metaphor might be drawn to their culinary culture: seasoned, saucy, and spicy.
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In 2005, I had witnessed, along with the rest of the world, as much of the city flooded in Hurricane Katrina, sucking down the cultural spirit along with it. But this was not the New Orleans I saw today. The New Orleans I experienced was a city rebuilt, and more radiant than ever, full of hope, passion and bustling with artistic energy (Prospect.1) It was fashionable, lively, boozy, woozy, fun and colorful! I hope this inspires you to visit because New Orleans needs you more than ever. NOLA welcomes you!

The Best Places to Visit When You’re There:

Prospect.1 New Orleans
http://www.prospectneworleans.org/
[P.1] is the largest biennial of international contemporary art ever organized in the United States, in museums, historic buildings, and found sites throughout New Orleans.

Café du Monde
1039 Decatur Street New Orleans, LA 70116
1-800-772-2927 Monday – Friday 8:30am – 5:00pm
http://www.cafedumonde.com/
Breakfast – dine on their famous beignets, coffee and orange juice.
Situated at the head of Jackson Square as hoarse drawn carriages trot by.
The Big Easy is about indulgent excess, and going all the way, even with breakfast.

Soniat House
1133 Chartres Street, New Orleans, LA 70116
Phone 504 522 0570
Phone (Toll Free) 800 544 8808
http://www.soniathouse.com/
Photo-op heaven! Quiet coutyard feel like Europe. New Orleans’ smallest luxury hotel in the romantic French Quarter…it’s the hotel you dream of discovering and New Orleans’s answer to a Relais & Châteaux. The Soniat House is comprised of three historic townhouses, with balconies and secluded courtyards. Unique, charmingly furnished guest rooms with period antiques in rich colors and luxury fabrics, Egyptian cotton bedsheets and goosedown pillows. The Chateau Marmont of Nola.
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Lower Ninth Ward, Prospect.1
http://www.prospectneworleans.org/
The site specific artwork from P.1 is amazing on it’s own, but what makes it most spectacular is the fact that it literally draws you into parts of the city that were the most catastrophically devastated by Katrina. This was the most flooded and destroyed area in Katrina. Today it feels like a vast, overgrown, urban field. Some houses have been rebuilt (we saw some of Brad Pitt’s), but mostly there are earily quiet, abandoned lots, dilapidated homes destroyed by the hurricane, and a few cars and people. Prospect.1 made this a hub of site-specific artwork, drawing thousands of visitors. Los Angeles artists Mark Bradford built a giant wood ark made of salvaged plywood from local homes [PHOTO P1000754.JPG]. A Diamond Is Forever had generously sponsored this, along with many of the artists and sculptures for Prospect.1. We also saw a public restroom that was turned into a fountain by artist Robin Rhodes. An installation by Wangechi Mutu began as a housing lot decorated with strung Christmas tree lights that mimicked the structure of the owner’s would-be home. The work was hanging directly above a shoddy foundation where builders had actually absconded with the insurance money to rebuild a real house. Devastating.
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New Orleans Mint
1123 La Salle St
New Orleans, LA 70113
(504) 522-3048
The Old U.S. Mint features art work from across the world as a key venue in the largest biennale in the United States.
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What Remains: Photographs by Sally Mann
Ogden Museum of Southern Art
925 Camp St., 539.9600; www.ogdenmuseum.org
Internationally acclaimed photographer Sally Mann’s What Remains expo features subjects that range from human skeletal relics and the death of her beloved pet greyhound, Eva, to a series dealing with the suicide of an escaped convict on the grounds of her family home. She is a favorite photographer of mine and this is a rare and wonderful chance to see her work. Through December.

Antoine’s Restaurant
http://www.antoines.com/
RESERVATIONS: 504-581-4422
Antoine’s Restaurant • 713 Rue Saint Louis • New Orleans, Louisiana 70130
This place is an old-school favorite, where we were served a 16-course tasting menu of southern Creole Cajun food, gumbo, a local drink called a “Hurricane,” and Sazerac punch. Very creamy, spicy, and seafood-heavy. So saucy, all you need is a spoon;You barely use your knife and fork.
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Garden District
Stroll down sunny Coliseum Street, lined with gorgeous Georgian mansions, each one grander and more eccentric than the next. The architecture combined with the installed art, the ornate gold chandeliers, and aristocratic oil paintings was just divine in a patina-ed, bit-of-rusting-grandeur kind of way. What is perfection about this neighborhood is how un-perfect and beautifully rambling it truly is. Mark Twain lived in this house.
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Commander’s Palace
1403 Washington Avenue
New Orleans, Louisiana 70130
at the corner of Coliseum Street in the Garden District
1-504-899-8221
Consistently ranked as one of the best in the country, I fed on the biggest raw bar I’d ever seen: a small boat filled with crabs, shrimp, oysters. There was also a suckling pig, fish with candied pecans, truffle-infused eggs over buttered biscuits, and corn cakes with caviar. Oh la la! Every southern delicacy you could imagine.
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Fall’s 5 Key Looks: A Cheat Sheet

Monday, December 8th, 2008

This was first published by Lesley M. M. Blume for The Huffington Post 21 August 2008

At last: fall is arriving. In fashion terms, autumn means tall, gorgeous boots; it means delicious layers of cashmere. Ta ta, ugly gladiator sandals; hello, luscious leopard-print swing coats.

What it also means: those mega-issues of Vogue, Bazaar, and W have been weighing down newsstands and crippling postal-workers across the country.

I don’t know about you, but those phonebook-sized magazines scare the hell out of me. I’m too exhausted from negotiating the first 800 pages of ads to drag myself through the editorials.

So to learn more about what the fashion world has dished up for us this fall, I took the easy way out and called up stylist, trend expert, and Huffington Post contributor Kate Schelter (www.kateschelter.com). Here is her shortlist of five major trends that designers and retailers are peddling this season:
1. The tuxedo shall reign supreme.
An appropriate homage to the recently-departed design master Yves Saint Laurent, who introduced Le Smoking to watershed-moment acclaim in the 1960s. This autumn, practically every designer under the sun — from Zac Posen to Calvin Klein – has reinterpreted that Victor-Victoria sensuality.

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above: Erin Fetherston, fall ’08 ready-to-wear, photo from style.com

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above: Zac Posen tuxedo dress, fall ’08 ready-to-wear, photo from style.com

On that note, Schelter reads me a delicious Catherine Deneuve quote about the masculine-feminine tension in YSL’s designs:

“Saint Laurent designs for women with a double life. His clothes for daywear help women to enter a world of strangers … thanks to their somehow masculine quality they give her a certain power, arm her for encounters which may lead to disputes. However, for the evening, when she may chose her company, he makes her seductive.”

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above: Yves Saint Laurent’s original 1966 Le Smoking tuxedo suit

With that in mind, go forth and smolder.
2. Beyond Le Smoking, there will be a major glut of menswear-reinterpreted-as-womenswear.

Suits, suits, everywhere – but nary a padded shoulder.

“This is a very empowering look, but it’s less of a Working Girl moment,” says Schelter. “It’s sexier.”

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above: Band of Outsiders, fall ’08 ready-to-wear, photo from style.com

Look for suits made from materials like silk, as opposed to chunky, tweedier threads:

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above: Chris Benz, fall ’08 ready-to-wear, photo from style.com

Also, those roomy, slouchy ‘boyfriend blazers’ with rolled up sleeves “were everywhere” — from Balmain to Rag&Bone – worn over threadbare t-shirts:

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above: Alexander Wang ‘boyfriend blazer, fall ’08 ready-to-wear, photo from style.com

Omnipresent as well: mens’ shirts reinterpreted as dresses, seen here in wunderkind Alexander Wang’s fall ready-to-wear collection:

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above: Alexander Wang shirtdress, fall ’08 ready-to-wear, photo from style.com
3. High-octane color.

“Color blocking was really important for this season,” says Schelter. Many collections featured “big colors like mango orange, saffron yellows, pinks … it’s like getting lost in a Ciao Bella ice cream store,” she adds.

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above: Chris Benz, fall ’08 ready-to-wear, photo from style.com

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above: Marni, fall ’08 ready-to-wear, photo from style.com

On a less encouraging front: neon colors are back too. Marc Jacobs’s neon bags (with names like “acid yellow”) are still in vogue; fingertips will be going day-glo.

At least it will be harder to get run over by a car at night.
4. Simply irresistible: The Robert Palmer look has been resurrected.

Says Schelter: “We’re seeing the return of the supertight little black dress, referencing Alaia, exentuating the female form.”

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above: Herve Leger, fall ’08 ready-to-wear, photo from style.com

Actress Rachel Bilson gave a preview of this look at a recent New York City party:

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above: photo from Patrick McMullan

I wanted to die as we looked through runway images of the elastic-y, fat-thigh-showcasing new fare, but Schelter was reassuring: “Don’t worry; there are different degrees of covering up this season.”

Thank God for le smoking.
5. Costume jewelry is de riguer.

Now, this is a very happy, humane trend indeed – flea market chic will be hitting the big time at last. Expect to see big, wonderful, shining brooches and necklaces and bracelets everywhere.

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Lulu Frost necklace

“Costume jewelry is the new statement piece, whereas it used to be the ‘It’ bag or shoes,” says Schelter. “But don’t wear it prim and prissy; layer it on.”

Yes, ma’am!

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Kate Schelter, photo by Patrick McMullan